3D Printing Resurrects 'King Richard III' Inn

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A medieval inn where England's King Richard III spent the night
before going off to die in battle has undergone minor
resurrection through 3D printing technology.

The Blue Boar Inn played host to Richard shortly before he died
at the Battle of Bosworth Field — an event commemorated by
Shakespeare in his fictional account of the doomed king crying
out: "My kingdom for a horse!" A
3D printer created a small model of the inn based on computer
modeling and detailed drawings found in the notebooks of a
19th-century architect.

"When I was looking through this notebook, what was thrilling
about it was that the drawings were so detailed," said Richard
Buckley, director of archaeological services at the University of
Leicester in the U.K., in a news release. "They showed how the
building was put together — the timber framing, the joints,
pegholes — all annotated with measurements in feet and inches."

The building's plans discovered in the notebooks of 19th-century
architect Henry Goddard became the basis for a computer-aided
design (CAD) model created by Steffan Davies, a modern architect
familiar with historic building drawings. That allowed a 3D
printer in the University of Leicester's department of physics
and astronomy to build a real model of the inn layer by layer.
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The 3D-printed model shows the timber framing of the inn, the
fireplaces and the chamber where Richard III supposedly stayed.
Researchers plan to not only exhibit the model for the public,
but also perhaps build a full-scale reconstruction of the inn
someday.

"Legend has it that Richard did not like sleeping in strange
beds, so had his own brought down from Nottingham in 'knock-down'
form so it could be put together at the inn," Buckley said.

The inn on Leicester's High Street may have hosted Richard III
under its original name of the White Boar Inn. Some historical
sources suggest the building changed its name after the Battle of
Bosworth Field to avoid any possible connections with Richard
III's badge.

Richard III went on to perish fighting at the Battle of Bosworth
Field — the last pivotal battle of England's War of the Roses
between the House of Lancaster and the House of York. The bloody
historical conflict later inspired the popular fantasy book
series "A Song of Fire and Ice" and its HBO TV show counterpart
" Game
of Thrones."

The University of Leicester team may have also
found Richard III's remains beneath a parking lot. But more
definitive proof will only come from DNA test results regarding
the male human skeleton discovered with a signs of battle wounds
at a site that seems to match historical accounts of Richard's
burial.